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Page 7 text:
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COPY STAFF Augusta Svoronos Alicia P. James SENIOR SECTION Luiza Demirian ADVERTISING Michele Pattwell Jane Adamo ARBO EDITORIAL BOARD Grazia M. Rechichi Editor-in-Chief Rosemary Volpe Layout Editor Helene Price Copy Editor Tomas T. Szoboszlai Photography Editor Darkroom Technician Margie Brand Art Director Madlyn Granieri Business Manager Cindy Ladopoulos Seniors Editor Paula Franzese Public Relations Karen Stugensky Advertising Manager Anne Salmson Faculty Photo Editor LAYOUT STAFF Debby Lee Shelly Saltzman Daria Vanides Grazia Rechichi Margie Brand Sara Susskind Michele Pattwell Jane Adamo Mandy Huang Augusta Svoronos PHOTOGRAPHY STAFF Tomas T. Szoboszlai color and B W printing; color and B W Alexander Pasik color John Lagomarsino color Avis Danishefsky color Alex Boschi color Tino Volpe color W W W W and B W and B and B and B and B Ellen Saidman B W Alicia P. James color and B W Anne Blomberg B W Grazia Rechichi B W Margie Brand B W Mary Umberger B W Madlyn Granieri color endsheets Sara Susskind B W since I ' ve been on the Mortarboard my hair is turning gray, Since I ' ve been on the Mortarboard I ' ve nearly passed away, Since I ' ve been on the Mortarboard I ' m getting lank and thin, Since I ' ve been on the Mortarboard, I sometimes swear like sin. Since I ' ve be .n on the Mortarboard, I ' m deeply dyed in gloom; Since I ' ve been on the Mortarboard I often fret and fume; Since I ' ve been on the Mortarboartl my lessons ha e — oh, well. The change that ' s taken place in me I haven ' t time to tell, I ' ut when the book is published such pleasure ' twill afford, I ' ll thank my lucky stars that I was on the Mortar- board ! Mortarboard 1921
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Page 6 text:
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TO THE CLASS OF 1979: You know better than I what your college experience has meant to you and what you will take from it, what has touched you most closely. The discovery of an area of interest, the development of intellectual and emotional strengths, the experience of friendship based on both admiration and equality — it is for you to discover what has mattered to you. But at the same time that each of us has her own experiences we also share in them. In talking with students at Barnard, I sensed that for many of you this has been a time of great intensity. I have an image of light not diffused gently but focused sharply, making some things extraordinarily vivid and at the same time surrounded by dark shadows. Perhaps I have that particular image because of the energy crisis. I do believe there are some developments in the world around us that prevade our lives and are felt as moods even when we do not think about them consciously. The world-wide energy crisis has made us suddenly aware of the vulnerability of a way of life that was taken for granted, both in its everyday aspects and in the more removed yet important sense we have of the relations of different nations and peoples to each other. We have all begun to feel a need to pull in, to conserve, to value what we can have. At the same time, the financial crisis and nation-wide economic difficulties have added to the feeling that, despite us (and that in itself is a special and difficult realization) options are fewer and choices harder won. As a result, you have worried about finding jobs as well as choosing careers and that has given the work you have done at Barnard a dark and serious side. You have also begun to be familiar, if not always comfort- able, with studies and reports demonstrating that as a woman you face problems in the job market as well as elsewhere that may affect you no matter how carefully you plan and how hard you work. College has been, then, a time of preparing to face hard challenges as well as of learn- ing and discovering strengths and interests and friendships. In this time of intensity, you have been magnificent. You have worked hard and found joy in your accomplishments that mitigates— and sometimes even replaces— anxiety. You have perhaps found fewer friends than those who went to college in expansive times, but the friendships you have are stronger, and more strengthening, for their intensity. In addition, some of you have found that there is a possibility of heightened individuality within supportive groups and that the other side of the illumination of problems is the invitation to join together in dealing with them even when they cannot be solved. Your college years may have been difficult and intense, but I da not believe they have often been dull or arid. We will miss you at Barnard but I do not worry about you. I think you are strong and I hope that we have had some part in helping you discover that strength. Time and time again graduates of Barnard answer my question about what Barnard meant to them by telling me it is a place where it is simply expected that they will excel. There is no- thing easy about living with such expectations, but then you did not choose to make things easy for your- self when you chose Barnard. That is why Barnard graduates are such remarkable women. My compliments and warmest wishes, Jacquelyn Anderson Mattfeld President
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Page 8 text:
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Ddf ilcir U o r dol. ncrolOi y D 17 1 f raUUIiy An Intprvipw i 1 II lid view 60 ApflHpmipQ In thp DnrnriQ III 11 IC7 LJyJi 11 lO Commuting 79 Celebrating Mrs. Mcintosh 82 In Memoriam 84 Socializing 89 Sports 99 Clubs 111 Graduating 129 Senior Directory 240 Advertising 251 ' ff sboulb no means vvisb a auobter of mine to be a progeny of learning. 11 Don ' t tbtnft so mncb learnino is becoming a vouno woman. — XTbe TRivals. Quote taken from 1900 Mortarbdard Columns adapted from 1903 Mortarboard
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